Muscle tissue is deep to epidermal tissue. Epidermal tissue is superficial to muscle tissue.
Stratum corneum
Stratum Corneum.
Skin is superficial to muscles. Superficial means above, while deep means below. So muscles are deep to skin and dermis is superficial to muscle tissue.
your skin
Epithelial tissue is an (animal) tissue which protect the structures beneath them whilst Epidermal is a (plant) tissue that protect the plant against injury at the same time prevent it from drying-out of its inner parts.
superficial transverse perineal muscle
A deep muscle is deeper in the body and a superficial muscle is closer to the surface.
The connective tissue layer that holds fascicles together is called the perimysium. It surrounds and protects each bundle of muscle fibers (fascicles) within a muscle.
No, they involve superficial epidermal cells
epidermal tissue
The most superficial epidermal layer is the stratum corneum. It is composed of dead keratinocytes that are constantly shedding or sloughing off. This layer acts as a protective barrier for the skin against environmental stressors.
In the way you are using "superficial" it will mean " being on or near the surface".Thus the answer is "YES" the skin is a superficial organ - BUT -"NO" the skin is not "superficial" specifically to muscles - it does not surround muscles, it surrounds the whole body and the muscles are beneath (and some in - the ones that raise the hairs) the skin.